An Argentine artist whose direct lyrics and grounded tracks like 'Gaucho' sketch scenes from real life.
For a quick sense of his lane, 'Gaucho' and 'Violenta' frame it well, plainspoken, no abstraction.
La Joaqui's music doesn't dress things up. Songs like 'Gaucho' and 'Perdón Mamá Por Mi Vida Loca' work with themes from street life, and the lyrics feel pulled from experience. That directness has drawn attention for both its popularity and the conversations it sparks about the worlds it describes.
He put out his first self-titled album in 2009, with later releases like 'Punto de Partida' and 'La Verdad'. Things shifted more than a decade later when 'Butakera' in 2020, featuring Alan Gomez and EL NOBA, connected with a much wider audience.
Keep it compact: a lyric you come back to, a live memory, or the part of the catalog you would point someone toward first.
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